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Lessons from a career marketing big ideas

Slides from a talk I gave at the TED Fellows Retreat in Whistler, BC on August 18, 2013. It tells the history of my activism about the web, open source software, and open government, with an emphasis
…

Slides from a talk I gave at the TED Fellows Retreat in Whistler, BC on August 18, 2013. It tells the history of my activism about the web, open source software, and open government, with an emphasis on lessons learned.

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Transcript

2.
Changing the world by spreading
the knowledge of innovators
Thursday, August 22, 13
For those of you who don’t know who I am... I run a technology publishing and events company called O’Reilly Media and an early stage venture capital firm O’Reilly AlphaTech
Ventures. It was once said “The Internet was built with O’Reilly books,” and indeed, there is more than one internet billionaire who told me that his company
was started with little more than an O’Reilly book. But I’ve long framed the real business of my company as “Changing the world by spreading the knowledge of innovators”
That’s obviously closely aligned with the mission of TED, and that’s why I’m honored to be here to talk with you.

3.
Work on stuff that matters
Thursday, August 22, 13
When I give talks to Silicon Valley audiences, I generally remind entrepreneurs that they should “Work on stuff that matters”

4.
Create more value than you capture
Thursday, August 22, 13
and “Create more value than you capture,” but I don’t need to do that here, because all of you are already doing both of those things. Instead, I want to talk to you about
marketing, and specifically, how I’ve learned to market big ideas and social movements, and to tell a story by bringing communities together.

5.
Commercialization of the World Wide Web
Open Source software
Web 2.0
The Maker Movement
Open Data
Open Government
Thursday, August 22, 13
Here are some of the movements I’ve been able to help shape. My company created the first ad supported web site and did much of the early work to establish the web
as a commercial medium. I organized the meeting where the term “open source software” was agreed to and adopted by key free software developers.

6.
In 1992, few people had heard of the Internet
“We’re not going to market the book. We’re
going to use the book to market the Internet.”
- Brian Erwin
former director of activism, The Sierra Club
Thursday, August 22, 13
My story as an activist begins with a book I published in 1992, The Whole Internet User’s Guide and Catalog. I had recently hired Brian Erwin, the former director
of activism for the Sierra Club, to help me with marketing. He said to me.... We went on a press tour, we sent a copy of the book to every member
of the US Congress, and I spoke to congressional staff. But I wasn’t pushing myself, or my product, but the internet itself.

7.
Lesson One: It’s not about you
Thursday, August 22, 13
We were unknown, but that didn’t stop us, because the story wasn’t about us. I was background - never quoted or mentioned by name - for many
early stories about the internet. I’d spend hours educating reporters. But that gave me the chance to frame the story, even though I didn’t get
any obvious press. And eventually, I did go from being an unnamed source to being frequently quoted.

8.
Lesson Two: It’s never too early to tell a big story
Thursday, August 22, 13
At the time we published the book, there were only 200 web sites. But we knew the web was going to be important.

9.
In 1993, we created an online magazine and
catalog to celebrate the people who were
making this new medium happen.
Thursday, August 22, 13
It was originally a demonstration site for the power of the web - we installed kiosks in bookstores so people could experience the interent, but then we
realized “It’s not a demo, it’s a product.” It was the ﬁrst web portal, and the ﬁrst site on the web to have advertising.

10.
We ended up developing the business model for the web
Thursday, August 22, 13
GNN turned into a business - one that shaped the whole future of the web. We were the ﬁrst site to provide advertising on the web. But
GNN started just as a way to celebrate the people of the web.

11.
Lesson Three:
“It's very hard getting communities formed.
But if a community is already formed and it
doesn't know it's a community, that's easy.”
Brian Erwin
Thursday, August 22, 13
But there was another lesson I learned from Brian. In describing the early work he did to market the Whole Internet User’s Guide by harnessing
online communities, he wrote:

12.
Thursday, August 22, 13
That was the playbook I put to work when, in 1998, I organized a meeting that came to be called The Open Source Summit, because it was there
that the leaders of most of the world’s most popular free software projects voted to use a new name, “open source software.” I realized that the
subjects of most of my bestselling books were free software packages - and what’s more, while I knew the authors of all these packages, they didn’t
all know each other. There were overlapping communities just waiting to be formed into a single super-community. You can see in the press release
that we sent out announcing the event how much we focused on the people who created the programs that ran the internet.

13.
The 1998 Open Source Summit
Thursday, August 22, 13
It was all about the people and their place in the story.
When we held a press conference at the end of the day, I could say: “If your company has a domain name, it works because of the software
written by that long haired guy at the end of the table. If you send an email, well, it’s routed by the software written by that guy there. If you have a web
site, well, that’s the long haired guy at the other end of the table. And when you use a web browser, it was written by *that* guy...

15.
Africa!
Thursday, August 22, 13
There are so many of you here, doing amazing work.
There’s more: High profile Investors - e.g. Mark Shuttleworth, Cheryl Mills - focused on Africa
But what’s the unifying story? It would be easy to tell a story about the African renaissance, but I think that there’s more to be said.

16.
Lesson Four: Language is a Map
Thursday, August 22, 13
There’s another big lesson from my open source activism. Language is a map. It describes the world. And if it does a good job describing the
world, you can get where you want. But if it doesn’t, you can be led astray.

17.
Words help us see and make sense of the world
Alfalfa
Orchard
Grass
Oat Grass
Thursday, August 22, 13
Let me explain what I mean very simply.
When I first moved to Sebastopol, before I had horses, I’d look out at a meadow, and all I’d see was grass. But eventually, I got a language for what I was looking at, and could
distinguish between alfalfa, oat grass, orchard grass, rye grass, and many more.

18.
Thursday, August 22, 13
For example, look at the map that the Free Software Foundation was offering the world in 1998. Free software was about developing a “free” variant of the
Unix operating system.

19.
Thursday, August 22, 13
Now let’s look back at that press release I sent out for the freeware summit. It was all about the Internet, and the role that various free software programs
played in making it work. My message was that free software wasn’t some fringe thing out to destroy the software industry - it was at the heart of the next big
software revolution, and people were already relying on it!

20.
“The skill of writing is to create a
context in which other people can
think.”
Edwin Schlossberg
Thursday, August 22, 13
As Edwin Schlossberg once
said:

21.
Thursday, August 22, 13
Around 2002, I wrote a paper called “Remaking the Peer to Peer Meme.” In that paper, I used a diagram I called a “meme map” to
show how I’d transformed the storytelling about free software into the storytelling about open source software. I know these are
eye charts from here, and there’s no way you can read them now, but I’ll put the slides up on slideshare, and even better, you
can go read the original paper. http://www.openp2p.com/pub/a/p2p/2000/12/05/book_ch01_meme.html

22.
Harnessing Collective Intelligence
Data is the “Intel Inside”
Thursday, August 22, 13
For example, after my colleague Dale Dougherty coined the term Web 2.0 to distinguish the companies that survived the dot com bust from those that
had gone down in ﬂames, I told a big story about what made them different. Because these were powerful ideas that became clearer and clearer to everyone over
time, the story had power, and it continued to have power long after the original “Web 2.0” meme had passed.

23.
Harnessing Collective Intelligence
Data is the “Intel Inside”
Thursday, August 22, 13
For example, after my colleague Dale Dougherty coined the term Web 2.0 to distinguish the companies that survived the dot com bust from those that
had gone down in ﬂames, I told a big story about what made them different. Because these were powerful ideas that became clearer and clearer to everyone over
time, the story had power, and it continued to have power long after the original “Web 2.0” meme had passed.

24.
Government as a platform
Thursday, August 22, 13
Similarly, when everyone else was all excited about social media uptake by government, I told a deeper story, about what government could learn from the
iPhone about becoming a platform.

25.
“We’ve opened up huge amounts of government
data to the American people, and put it on the
Internet for free.... And what’s happening is
entrepreneurs and business owners are now
using that data -- the people’s data --to create
jobs and solve problems that government can’t
solve by itself or can’t do as efficiently.”
Barack Obama
Thursday, August 22, 13
Last month, when President Obama talked about his second term management agenda, open data, and its role in enabling private sector to
build on government as a platform, was a key part of the message.

26.
?
Thursday, August 22, 13
My point is that if I were going to try to tell a big story about Africa, I’d think hard to understand what is driving the African renaissance that
many of you are a part of, and what lessons it might have for the rest of the world. This morning, over breakfast, I was talking to
Bright Simons about the informal economy in Africa, and Africa’s unique style of entrepreneurialism. I think there are some real
lessons for the West there, and that’s one thread I’d be pulling on.
The same is true for any of the other possible conjunctions of communities and big ideas that
characterize the TED Fellows community.

27.
Reinventing the Faire
Low Tech Meets High Tech
Thursday, August 22, 13
It’s important for your story to draw the right lines. Many of you are part of a movement that we named in 2005 with the launch of Make: magazine, and the 2006 launch of an
event called Maker Faire, which you can think of as a kind of county fair with robots. There are artists and scientists among you who can call yourself “makers” and say
something important about the overlap of art and science.

28.
Maker Faire 2006
Thursday, August 22, 13
One of my favorite juxtapositions of that ﬁrst Faire was between a booth for Swap-o-Rama-Rama, a clothing swap in which people remanufacture
the clothes with the help of onsite designers, sewing machines, silk screens, etc, and put on a fashion show for each other at the end of the day, and the Alameda
Contra Costa Computer Recycling Society, which was showing off their biodiesel powered supercomputer made from recycled PCs running
Linux. It was a brilliant stroke by Dale Dougherty to build a tent big enough to include both crafts and the geekiest of high-tech. Drawing the right
map of the world you want to create can make a huge difference.

29.
TED Makers: Engineering, Science, AND Art
Thursday, August 22, 13
You see how this bracketing of both the arts and sciences has continued in TED’s selection of makers as Fellows,
from Marcin Jacubowski’s Global Village Construction set and Jose Gomez Marquez’ homebrew medical devices to Kate Nichols
nanoparticle art and Christina Marie’s shadow performances. This is a good sign.

30.
Lesson Five: Change happens slowly...
Then all at once
Thursday, August 22, 13
I still remember the early years of evangelizing the world wide web, or open source software, or the second coming of the web after the dot com bust.
It was hard. Nobody believed me. But eventually, the world caught up.
You are all on the cutting edge of world changing movements. Keep pushing, and the world will catch up.

31.
What we fight with is so small.
And when we win, it makes us small.
This is how we grow: by being defeated,
decisively, by constantly greater beings.
(Paraphrase of “The Man Watching,”
by Rainer Maria Rilke)
Thursday, August 22, 13
And I’d like you to remember this advice from Rainer Maria Rilke’s poem, The Man Watching. He describes how Jacob and the other wrestlers of the
Old Testament used to wrestle with angels. They had no hope of winning, but they were strengthened by the ﬁght. Rilke goes on to say, “Winning
does not tempt that man. What we ﬁght with is so small, and when we win, it makes us small. What we want is to be defeated, decisively, by
progressively greater beings.” So, relish your challenges, and keep picking big ﬁghts. Thank you very much.